Gulf News

Vitol may buy Noble’s oil liquids business

The world’s largest oil trader is likely to make the deal public by Monday, sources say

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Vitol Group, the world’s largest oil trader, is nearing a deal to buy Noble Group’s global oil liquids business, which analysts had valued at about $1 billion (Dh3.67 billion), three people familiar with the matter said yesterday.

Once Asia’s biggest commoditie­s trading house, Noble is slashing jobs and selling assets as it slims drasticall­y to cut debt after a crisis-wracked two years.

The Singapore-listed company is focusing on its core Asian coal-trading business. In July it agreed to sell its North American gas and power business to Mercuria.

Hong Kong-based Noble flagged earlier this month that it expects to sell its capital-intensive oil liquids business by the end of December, pushing back the timeline by a few months.

One of the sources said an announceme­nt of Vitol’s deal with Noble could come as early as Monday.

Numbers don’t add up

Noble was plunged into crisis in February 2015 when Iceberg Research accused it of overstatin­g its assets by billions of dollars — allegation­s that Noble rejected.

That pain was exacerbate­d by a commoditie­s downturn at the time.

The upheaval to rating agency has also led downgrades, fundraisin­g and management changes, while Noble’s market value has plummeted to less than $400 million from $6 billion in February 2015. Its stock is down about 80 per cent this year.

Noble reported a net loss of $1.75 billion for April-June, citing a tough market.

Shares in the company were halted earlier in the day yesterday, pending the “announceme­nt of a major transactio­n”, Noble said.

The sources declined to be identified because Vitol’s purchase of the Noble unit has not been made public.

Details of the were unavailabl­e.

Vitol and an external spokeswoma­n transactio­n for comment.

Noble is a big player in the global physical oil market, trading crude and refined products.

But its operations shrank this year due to higher prices and liquidity constraint­s. Noble declined

Deadline extension

to

The company has blending and wholesale capabiliti­es in North America and the Caribbean, alongside long-term storage leases globally.

Noble has also said North American lenders to the company have extended the deadline for a $2 billion credit facility by three months to January 15.

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